News12 New York
N12 Originals
Numbers & Links
Local
Crime
Weather
Politics
Taxing Long Island
Stony Brook Medicine
Vote 2026: Long Island primaries

Federal judge approves Diocese of Rockville Centre's bankruptcy plan; finalizes $323M settlement for hundreds of alleged sex abuse victims

The judge said he hoped this resolution would bring the victims peace and begin to put the church's history behind it.

Jonathan Gordon

Dec 4, 2024, 12:16 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

A years-long, painful legal battle between the eighth largest diocese in the country and hundreds of alleged sex abuse victims came to an end today.

Chief Judge Martin Glenn signed off on the Diocese of Rockville Centre's bankruptcy plan which finalized the $323 million settlement to begin dolling out payments early next year. The case was heard in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York in Manhattan.

The diocese, which represents 134 parishes across both Nassau and Suffolk counties, reached a $323 million settlement with roughly 600 victims back in September but the plan still needed final court approval.

Adam Slater, a founder at Slater Slater Schulman LLP., which served as a mediation party released this statement:

“This settlement with the Diocese of Rockville Centre is a watershed moment. It represents the largest diocesan settlement in New York State and largest settlement involving a diocese in bankruptcy nationwide. Notably, it’s also the first such settlement following the Supreme Court's Purdue Pharma decision on non-consensual third-party releases. Most critically, it brings long-awaited justice to 600 survivors, 100 of whom my firm was proud to represent.”

Parishioners reacted to today's hearing outside of St. Agnes Cathedral in Rockville Centre today.

"It's a tragedy that's all I can say," one parishioner said.

"The people that were harmed by them are entitled to everything they are going to get," another added.

The case dates back to 2019 when then Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the Child Victim's Act, which temporarily allowed abuse victims to file lawsuits regardless of when the abuse happened.

The diocese would not say how much each church is contributing to the payout but parishioners have told News 12 that some are on the hook for upwards of tens of thousands of dollars each.

A diocese spokesperson said the settlement would not affect the operations at any church or force any to close.

Parishioners are not being directly asked to contribute though one woman said she wouldn't mind her money going towards the settlement.

"That's okay because everything you put into the church is for God," Nieve Collado said.

Diocese officials said the decision to file for bankruptcy was to protect the institution financially.

A spokesperson for the Diocese of Rockville Center released the following statement:

"We are grateful to God that on December 4th, the court confirmed the Plan that resolves and ends the Bankruptcy Case for the Diocese of Rockville Centre, all our parishes, and related ministries. For the sake of abuse survivors and the Church's mission on Long Island, we pray that the Plan brings some measure of healing to survivors and allows the Church to carry on the saving mission of Jesus Christ. Victim survivors of child abuse deserve our respect, our prayers, and our pastoral support. The Church is grateful for their courage and perseverance.

The total settlement amount was just over $323 million, which included insurance contributions, Diocesan assets and sale proceeds from Diocesan property, and contributions from parishes and other related entities. The Diocese, parishes and other related entities contributed a total of $234.8 million. Insurance companies contributed a total of just over $85 million. Counsel for the Creditor's Committee contributed $3 million. All participated in order to offer equitable compensation to survivors and move this difficult ordeal towards its conclusion.

Parishes also completed an abbreviated Chapter 11 to secure a release from any past liabilities for the parishes. No parishes are closing as a result of this process. No Catholic Ministries Appeal donations were used for this settlement. Parishes will now continue their ministry, free from historical lawsuits and free from bankruptcy. We are grateful for the expert counsel of Jones Day, Alvarez & Marsal, and Reed Smith, as well as for the Westerman Ball Firm of Long Island that shepherded our parishes through Chapter 11.

The Diocese's goal has always been the equitable compensation of survivors of abuse while allowing the Church to continue her essential mission. We believe this plan has achieved those goals."

More Stories

Top Stories

01:53
RTLIBethpageStatePkwyPetitionJRGaertner10pm_2026-06-20-22-07-48

Residents who live near Bethpage State Parkway call for stronger safety measures after fatal crash on roadway

02:02
HV HOLIDAY FORECAST SPONSOR

Sunny and warm Father's Day on Long Island before soaking rain and thunderstorms arrive Monday

00:34
Stabbing Incident Generic

Man accused of stabbing roommate at Long Island equestrian center

00:34
620newbeatingsuspect_2026-06-20-06-04-02

New arrest made in Shirley man’s gruesome beating death

01:46
JaxsonDartinWestport_2026-06-20-18-13-12_18-06-00,21

New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart hosts football camp at Staples High School in Westport

00:31
620jewlerytheft_2026-06-20-07-13-38

Home health aide accused of stealing nearly $10K in jewelry from East Setauket family

00:29
Serious crash in New Haven critically injures 2 people

2 people seriously injured in Huntington Station crash

00:25
ambulance generic

Man pulled from Huntington Station pool hospitalized in serious condition

00:51
li10pmbolwavetwister_2026-06-19-22-04-58

Malfunction temporarily traps guests on Adventureland ride

01:59
li10pmboljennaupate_2026-06-19-22-25-08

Big events bring heavy traffic to Long Island this holiday weekend

01:47
li5pmbolnews12liregents_2026-06-19-17-11-25

Parents raise concerns over ‘unfair’ state science Regents Exams

01:22
li5pmfirefighterdadanddaughterjulia_2026-06-19-17-22-06

‘A bond we share.' Father and daughter work together to fight fires and protect community

02:29
solsltice sunset

Summer begins this Sunday with over 15 hours of daylight for Father’s Day

00:45
LIPalOMine619_2026-06-19-21-20-11

Pal-O-Mine Equestrian hosts ‘The Mane Event’ to celebrate Year of the Horse

00:29
power outage

Power outage affects three Long Island beaches

01:54
LIWorldCupWatch6195p_2026-06-19-17-17-17

World Cup watch parties, US Open & Father’s Day make for hectic weekend on LI roads

00:26
governor's

Man stabbed after argument at Governor’s Comedy Club in Levittown

00:23
DWI CRASH

Oceanside man arrested for DWI after striking 78-year-old pedestrian

01:44
LISeelig6619_2026-06-19-06-15-26

More traffic concerns as 25K fans expected at Shinnecock Hills for U.S. Open

AP26170714954300

Despite Christian Pulisic’s absence, US beats Australia 2-0 to advance to World Cup knockout round

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices